APR 16, 2014 • Article
Dance of the Furies: Michael Neiberg on Europe and the Outbreak of World War I
"It is impossible for me to see how a Second World War, a Holocaust, a Cold War, a globally-engaged United States, and decolonization could happen ...
APR 16, 2014 • Article
Ukraine, The Great Powers, Budapest, and "Astheneia"
Was it unethical for the United States to give Ukraine non-binding security guarantees as an inducement for giving up nuclear weapons?
APR 16, 2014 • Podcast
Iran and Nuclear Proliferation: Update with Joseph Cirincione
Joseph Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, discusses the status and prospects for the ongoing P5+1 talks in Vienna on Iran's nuclear program, and the ...
APR 15, 2014 • Podcast
Temptations of Power: Islamists and Illiberal Democracy in a New Middle East
What if a group decides democratically that they don't want to be liberal--that they want an "illiberal democracy"? Shadi Hamid argues that repression originally compelled ...
APR 15, 2014 • News
Unionists Fail to Target Scots' Hearts and Minds
Carnegie Council Senior Fellow David Speedie responds in a letter to "Financial Times" about an article concerning Scottish independence.
APR 15, 2014 • News
Ukraine Launches Operation Against Pro-Russian Forces
Carnegie Council Senior Fellow and CBS military analyst Colonel Jeff McCausland (ret.) discusses the current military and political situation in Ukraine.
APR 14, 2014 • Podcast
Asia's Cauldron: The South China Sea and the End of a Stable Pacific
No wonder the South China Sea is important to China, says Robert Kaplan. It's the Mediterranean of Asia, the center of international commerce, including energy ...
APR 14, 2014 • News
Jingo Unchained: What World War I Wrought
"Ethics & International Affairs" Associate Editor Zach Dorfman writes on World War I and its (rather unsavory) long-term effects on American politics.